107. Normocephalic Colombian Children with Antenatal Zika Virus Exposure Have Neurodevelopmental Differences at Age 7 Years
Sarah B Mulkey, Regan Andringa-Seed, Heather Gordish-Dressman, Colleen Peyton, Gilbert Vezina, Michael Msall, Margarita Arroyave-Wessel, Roberta L DeBiasi, Elizabeth Corn, Meagan E Williams, Carlos A Cure, Madison Berl

TL;DR
Children exposed to Zika virus in the womb but without birth defects still show lower cognitive scores and brain MRI changes at age 7.
Contribution
Longitudinal cognitive and MRI findings in Zika-exposed children without congenital Zika syndrome reveal persistent developmental differences.
Findings
Zika-exposed children had lower verbal comprehension and working memory scores at age 7 compared to controls.
Some Zika-exposed children showed non-specific brain MRI abnormalities like white matter injuries and cysts.
Cognitive scores of Zika-exposed children improved from age 5 to 7, but remained lower than controls.
Abstract
The long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes of children with antenatal Zika-virus (ZIKV) exposure who did not have congenital Zika syndrome (CZS) at birth are not well known. In our cohort of Colombian children with antenatal ZIKV exposure and no CZS, cognitive outcomes at age 5 found lower full-scale IQ scores compared to non-exposed controls. This prospective case-control study evaluated multidomain developmental outcome trajectory and brain MRI at age 7 years in ZIKV-exposed children without CZS (Cases) and non-exposed children (Controls) from the same communities. We analyzed trends in cognitive scores over time from age 5 to 7 using a mixed effects linear regression model. 46 Cases and 59 Controls were evaluated at mean (SD) ages 7.05 (0.14) and 7.09 (0.13) years, respectively. Cases had lower scores in Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence verbal comprehension…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMosquito-borne diseases and control · Autism Spectrum Disorder Research · Health, Environment, Cognitive Aging
